Tag Archives: iPad

Tickle Me Typo

A search for a “laptop” on the Toys “R” Us website produces 439 results.  Overwhelmed by these options, I decided to narrow the search to the 3-4 year old age bracket, which brought the count down to 21 PC-like toys.  I find this markedly-reduced number no less disconcerting, however; there are 21 laptop products for customers who are, essentially, toddlers?  It’s never to early to introduce another glowing rectangle into your child’s life…

The collection includes products like these:

This investigation into personal computing options for small children was precipitated by an article on Bits two days ago about the Fisher-Price iXL, an $80 iPad imitation — let’s call it the iPadlet — complete with apps, a touch screen, an SD-card slot and a USB port.  Utter insanity.  That it ‘opens like a book’ is an ironic slap-on-the-face for those dinosauric purists who might argue that such products represent yet another turn away from the bona fide book and the literacies it engenders.

iPaddling Upstream

Okay. I promised I’d tune back into the Apple tablet hubbub when the fateful day came. Well, today was the day, and, while I can’t break a promise, I’d like to state the obvious, aggregate a few opinions, and be done with it.

Responses to the announcement of the Apple iPad have been overwhelmingly negative (common crits: giant iPhone, awkward size, no camera…). It’s been picked apart by Gizmodo, its “under the hood” capabilities questioned by lalawag, and the Onion, ever the barometer of popular opinion, has implied that it’s as though Steve Jobs pulled an all-nighter and the iPad was the result.  [For a view on the bright side, see the Apple iPad page].

David Pogue’s reaction has just been published on NYTimes.com, and, as usual, his appraisal is level-headed and he cautions us not to jump to conclusions. The iPad offers an incomparable reading/watching experience, perhaps at the expense of creating; it’s a “sack of potential” over which we should not hyperventilate.

So that’s that. Until I hold one in my hands, I’ll leave the opining to the techies.